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Climate change
Opinion
Shi Jiangtao

Opinion | It could be a watershed year for China’s climate change fight. Public participation is crucial

  • The world’s biggest polluter will have to set climate targets for 2035 soon
  • Notorious smog problems have returned as the addiction to coal worsens

Reading Time:3 minutes
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Air pollution worsened across China last year amid extreme weather events like sandstorms and droughts and a resurgence in coal use. Photo: AP
This is likely to be a watershed year in China’s fight against climate change and other environmental woes.

Beijing will have to set its climate targets for 2035 soon – by 2025 – as is required under the Paris Agreement.

In doing so, the world’s largest polluter will have to address concerns about how it plans to achieve its goals of limiting coal consumption growth by 2025 and reaching peak carbon emissions before 2030.

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There is much at stake, yet it does not seem to be going well.

China’s notorious smog problems – which seemed to be largely under control in the past decade – returned last year as the country’s addiction to dirty coal got worse.
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In 2023, most of the big cities, including Beijing and Hong Kong, recorded increased levels of the microscopic airborne particles known as PM2.5 – one of the top five factors limiting life expectancy in China.

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